Sodium bicarbonate, the chemical name of baking soda, is an alkali, which reacts with the acid vinegar, to neutralise the 2 chemicals
Or, if you want to get technical..... Sodium Bicarbonate (chemical NaHCO3) combines with the dilute Acetic Acid in vinegar, (chemical CH3COOH) to form Sodium Acetate, Water and Carbon Dioxide gas. The gas is released in the form of small bubbles. If the mixture is strong enough and warm enough, it fizzes rapidly. NaHCO3 + CH3COOH → CH3CO2Na + H2O + CO2 (gas) in other words the the salad dressing (vinegar) and the powdery stuff (baking soda) explode when they touch each other
my mom
first you put the baking soda in the model then you put in the vinigar and watch it explode into a million peices
well, the chemicals and molecules in the baking soda and vinegar causes them to react with each other.
No, not all liquids will react with baking soda. Baking soda reacts with acidic substances to produce carbon dioxide gas, which creates bubbles and causes the mixture to expand. Liquids that are not acidic may not react with baking soda in this way.
Yes
my old trick is baking soda and vinigar that always does the trick
By using baking soda, CO3 , and vinigar. The vinigar destroyes one of the carbon atoms making CO2.
Well, Baking soda is a base, and vinigar is an acid. As they try to cancel each other out, it creates a fizzing, chemical reaction
The chemicals of the soda and vinegar collide together making more pressure as it builds and than it just explodes.
At the temperature of the cooking, NaHCO3 (baking soda) is transformed in Na2CO3; this compound (sodium carbonate) react with the acetic acid from vinegar.
When baking soda and vinegar react together, carbon dioxide gas is produced.
Liquid